One of four technology and user centres for “green” hydrogen in Germany is currently being built in Pfeffenhausen, Bavaria. At the heart of the centre is a 5 MW hydrogen production plant. As general contractor, Kraftanlagen Energies & Services was awarded the contract for the planning, construction and commissioning of this plant.
“We are delighted to have been selected as the general contractor for this Bavarian project of the future and to be able to contribute our hydrogen expertise to the power-to-gas plant in Pfeffenhausen. Together with our customer Hy2B, we are setting a milestone for a sustainable energy transition with this project. It is important that large-scale hydrogen projects are now being launched, because hydrogen is the medium that can be produced and stored using renewable energies and because it is important to implement the first pilot projects here”, said Alfons Weber, CEO von Kraftanlagen Energies & Services.
The key component of the plant – the alkaline electrolyser – is being supplied by the Norwegian manufacturer NEL.
At the end of August this year, an important construction phase was successfully completed with the installation of the compressors.
Once operational, the electrolysis plant will produce an average of 1,200 kilograms of green hydrogen per day. This is then compressed to up to 450 bar and filled into transport trailers at the filling station. These trailers will then distribute the hydrogen to bus and truck refuelling stations in the Munich and Ebersberg districts, supplying the regional bus services of Münchner Verkehrs- und Tarifverbund GmbH with green fuel for ten hydrogen fuel cell buses. The remaining green hydrogen will be used to supply other customers in the mobility and energy sectors.
The electricity needed to produce the hydrogen will initially come from a twelve megawatt ground-mounted photovoltaic system in the immediate vicinity of the plant. There are also plans to build two wind turbines on the site of the hydrogen centre.
The Pfeffenhausen Hydrogen Centre is being funded by the German government with up to 72.5 million euros and up to 30 million euros from the Free State of Bavaria.
screenshot of Kraftanlagen Energies & Services
Press release https://www.kraftanlagen.com/en/green-hydrogen-from-bavaria/